The final list of goods released by the US Trade Representative will apply to roughly $16 billion worth of items coming into the US, bringing the total amount of Chinese goods subject to the Section 301 tariffs up to $50 billion.

The tariffs are designed to avoid consumer goods, instead focusing on machinery, chemicals, and other industrial items. In particular, the USTR has said that the list is supposed to hit industries identified in Beijing’s Made in China 2025 plan. The plan is designed to help boost Chinese businesses in certain high-growth industries like tech and manufacturing.

Despite the focus on industrial goods, many economists say that the increased costs for American manufacturers will eventually be passed down to consumers in the form of higher prices.

While businesses had the chance to comment on the initial list, released in July, there are only five items that were ultimately dropped from the original. Those items that were spared from the tariffs are:

Alginic acid

Machines for splitting or slicing wood, cork, bone, or similar hard materials

Floating docks

Intermodal shipping containers

Microtomes

Here’s some of the major categories to be hit with the new tariff:

Lubricating oils

Polymers used in things such as clear plastic wrap and Styrofoam coolers

Resins and other industrial chemicals

Plastic tubes and pipes

Plates, sheets, film, foil, and strips of various plastics and polymers

Bridges or bridge parts made of iron or steel

Engines for industrial equipment

Agricultural equipment such as irrigation systems and seeders

Tractors

Specialty motor vehicles

Thermometers

Speedometers

Measuring equipment for everything from electrical currents to liquid supply